Futures Movers: Oil prices surge over 3% to four-month high as EU agrees stimulus package

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Oil futures headed sharply higher on Tuesday, setting prices up for their highest settlement since early March, as markets grow more positive about the world’s ability to address the COVID-19 pandemic which has crushed demand for crude and its byproducts.

A historic stimulus package forged by the 27-nation European Union after marathon negotiations since Friday, helped to set the stage for a climb higher for oil. Investors also may also becoming more assured that countrys can beat back a surge in COVID-19 cases. Investors cheered the positive results from at least two experimental COVID-19 vaccines Monday.

The catalyst for the overnight crude spike is the stimulus package in Europe “that will feed demand and allow a risk-on attitude to drive markets higher and create economic forces that will burn more oil,” said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at The Price Futures Group.

The EU agreed a €750 billion ($860 billion) coronavirus rescue fund, and investors also are watching for developments with additional fiscal stimulus measures from the U.S., which could help curtail the recession that has been wrought by the pandemic.

Against that backdrop, West Texas Intermediate crude for August delivery CL.1, +3.45% CLQ20, +3.45% on the New York Mercantile Exchange rose $1.43, or 3.5%, at $42.24 a barrel, after gaining 0.5% on Monday. If gains hold, the front-month contract would close around its highest level since late March, according to FactSet data.

The August contract will expire at the end of the day’s session. September WTI crude CLU20, +3.49%, which will become the front month, traded up $1.44, or 3.5%, at $42.36 a barrel.

September Brent crude BRN.1, +3.39% on ICE Futures Europe climbed by $1.51, or 3.5%, at $44.79 a barrel, after the global benchmark rose 0.3% in the previous session. Brent’s Tuesday gain is also pushing that grade oil to its highest levels since early March.

On Monday, crude scored an injection of fresh optimism on the back of reports on progress toward vaccine candidates for coronavirus being developed by the University of Oxford and AZN, -1.21% as well as those in the works from the likes of Pfizer PFE, +0.50% and BNTX, +3.88%.

The global tally for confirmed cases of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 climbed to 14.7 million on Tuesday, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University, and the death toll rose to 610,292.

Oil prices got a boost Monday from “optimism that a vaccine for the novel coronavirus will be ready for production this year,” said Stephen Innes, global chief market strategist at AxiCorp, in a market update.

“All the while, U.S. production shows few signs of coming back,” with data Friday from Baker Hughes showing a weekly fall of just 1 in the number of active U.S. oil drilling rigs, he said. The “offset” is the COVID-19 headlines, which are “adding to pressure ahead of the return next month of some supply as the OPEC+ production cuts begin to taper.”

Looking ahead, “the pace of oil price improvement in the face of real virus demand risks will likely remain sluggish, suggesting [that] unless the epidemic curve flattens and lockdown are rolled back, there remains more considerable downside than upside price risk through the near term contract,” said Innes.

Weekly petroleum inventory data from the Energy Information Administration will be released Wednesday morning. The American Petroleum Institute, a trade group, will release its own figures, late Tuesday.

On average, analysts expect the EIA to report a decline of 1.9 million barrels in crude inventories for the week ended July 17, according to a survey of analysts conducted by S&P Global Platts. That would mark a second straight weekly decline. The survey also called for a fall of 2 million barrels for gasoline stockpiles, but distillate inventories are expected to show a climb by roughly 280,000 barrels.

Back on Nymex, August gasoline RBQ20, +4.27% added 4.2% to $1.2806 a gallon and August heating oil HOQ20, +4.16% rose 3.9% to $1.2837 a gallon.

August natural gas NGQ20, +1.88% climbed by 1.9% to $1.672 per million British thermal units, looking to recoup part of the 4.5% it lost Monday.